]]>American researchers at the Rice University in Houston, Texas have created the world’s smallest battery, fabricated with an array of nanowires measuring only 150 nanometres wide — thousands of times smaller than a human hair.

The minuscule lithium ion batteries, say the reasearchers, may be chosen as the rechargeable power sources of future nanotechnologies. The lead researcher, Prof. Pulickel Ajayan, has gone so far as to claim the invention is the smallest such batteries will ever get.

The nanowires are constructed from bands of either nickel or tin as an anode, polyethylene oxide electrolytes and polyaniline as a cathode. Though the battery isn’t in its finished form yet, the team says the capacity is noteworthy, but they’re still working to fine-tune the materials “to increase their ability to repeatedly charge and discharge.”

]]>http://www.mobilemag.com/2011/08/03/enter-the-worlds-smallest-battery/feed/0World’s smallest battery powering big research findshttp://www.mobilemag.com/2010/12/10/world%e2%80%99s-smallest-battery-powering-big-research-finds/ http://www.mobilemag.com/2010/12/10/world%e2%80%99s-smallest-battery-powering-big-research-finds/#commentsFri, 10 Dec 2010 20:42:33 +0000http://www.mobilemag.com/?p=110485A team of researchers at the Center for Integrated Nanotechnologies (CINT) has developed the world’s smallest battery. Reported in the December issue of the Science journal, the researchers’ discovery has wide-reaching implications that will aid in the development of smaller, more efficient batteries in the future.

]]>A team of researchers at the Center for Integrated Nanotechnologies (CINT) has developed the world’s smallest battery. Reported in the December issue of the Science journal, the researchers’ discovery has wide-reaching implications that will aid in the development of smaller, more efficient batteries in the future.

Their discovery actually changes our fundamental understanding of how batteries work. By observing a battery inside a transmission electron microscope, they found that during charging the nanowire, the batteries increased in length by a much greater magnitude than they increased in width. While this may seem insignificant, it is the opposite of what is commonly believed about batteries. Furthermore, the resilience of nanowires makes them excellent candidates for battery electrodes.

Said lead researcher Jianyu Huang: “Our experiments also lay a foundation for in-situ studies of electrochemical reactions, and will have broad impact in energy storage, corrosion, electrodeposition and general chemical synthesis research field.”

In laymen’s terms: while the world’s smallest battery won’t be powering your devices in 2011, this is a monumental step in researchers’ understanding of the internal physics of batteries and should lead to smaller and more efficient batteries sooner than we think.

The video below demonstrates the in-situ visualization of the battery charging process of a single tin oxide nanowire anode 100 nanometers in diameter and 10 micrometers long, a bulk lithium cobalt oxide cathode three millimeters long, and an ionic liquid electrolyte.